Well, first off, the Skylake CPUs have been replaced by seventh-generation Kaby Lake Intel Core m3, i5, i7 processors, which should not only offer a performance boost — around 20 percent, according to Microsoft — but also better battery life.

And the improved battery life is quite dramatic. Overall, the new Surface Pro gets a rated 4.5 hours more than the older hardware. That figure means that the Surface Pro’s battery life is only an hour behind the Surface Laptop.

Oh, and rather oddly for modern devices, the Surface Pro is not thinner or lighter than it’s predecessor, instead maintaining the exact same dimensions of its predecessor.

The stylus has also been improved, featuring a four-fold increase in pressure sensitivity, up to 4096 levels, equivalent to other high-end styli. Another new feature is tilt sensitivity, a first for the Surface stylus.

The stylus has also been redesigned to make it longer and remove the pen clip feature.

Another small change is a redesigned kickstand hinge, which now allows the tablet to recline back to 165 degrees.

For all you USB-C fans out there, I’m sorry to disappoint but Microsoft is not following in Apple’s footsteps. It has instead opted for a traditional USB 3 port. Microsoft is, however, offering an optional USB-to-USB-C dongle.

Prices start at $799 (the Surface Pro 4 currently starts at $699) and the fully-kitted out system is $2,699. Microsoft says that a 4G/LTE version will be available later this year, so road warriors might want to hold out on upgrading just yet.